Know when the International Space Station is visible. Based on your latitude and longitude.
The International Space Station travels in orbit around Earth at a speed of roughly 17,150 miles per hour. That's about 5 miles per second! This means the ISS orbits Earth (and sees a sunrise) once every 92 minutes!
You sure as hell can! Every so often, you can see the ISS in your night sky. To us on Earth, it looks like a bright star moving quickly above the horizon. Visible to the naked eye, the ISS is best seen at dawn and dusk. It is the third brightest object in the sky.
- Simply add another config entry
-
The current altitude of the ISS
-
The current velocity of the ISS
-
The date and time of the next sighting for your location
-
Length of time the ISS will be visible
-
The direction you should be looking to see the ISS when it appears
-
git clone https://github.com/mykle1/MMM-ISS
into the~/MagicMirror/modules
directory. -
No dependencies, yet! :-)
{
disabled: false,
module: 'MMM-ISS',
position: 'top center',
config: {
country: "Japan",
city: "Tokyo",
lat: "42.6977", // latitude
lng: "23.3219", // longitude
units: "km", // mi = miles, mph / km = kilometers, km/h
useHeader: false, // true if you want a header
header: "", // Any text you want. useHeader must be true
updateInterval: 5 * 60 * 1000,
}
},
{
disabled: false,
module: 'MMM-ISS',
position: 'middle_center',
config: {
country: "United States",
regionState: "New York", // Requires state
city: "New York", // Requires city
lat: "40.565819", // latitude
lng: "-74.117500", // longitude
units: "mi", // mi = miles, mph / km = kilometers, km/h
useHeader: false, // true if you want a header
header: "", // Any text you want. useHeader must be true
updateInterval: 5 * 60 * 1000,
}
},
@timma11 wrote: @Mykle1, Thanks for making these modules. I have 2 of yours installed. Might I suggest adding to the readme that the module can’t use every location and that it can only use ones listed on the findthesation.nasa.gov site.